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April 22 – April 28, 2016

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Even Apple isn’t immune to Chinese oversight. China debt load is piling high. Retailer existential crisis.

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FT – SOE you think you can default? – David Keohane 4/21

FT – China debt load reaches record high as risk to economy mounts – Gabriel Wildau and Don Weinland 4/23

FT – Alphaville: “What if China lands hard?” they asked in 2013 – David Keohane 4/27

FT – Unpaid bills add to China debt problems as receivables mount – Gabriel Wildau 4/26

FT – Alarm over corporate debt and stalled earnings 4/27

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*Note: bold emphasis is mine, italic sections are from the articles.

Apple Services Shut Down in China in Startling About-Face. Paul Mozur and Jane Perlez. New York Times. 21 Apr. 2016.

Not only did Apple just have its first quarterly fall in sales in 13 years, but business is getting tougher for the corporate innovator in China – which is why legendary investor Carl Icahn just dumped his entire stake.

“Last week, Apple’s iBooks Store and iTunes Movies were shut down in China, just six months after they were started there.”

“China’s pushback against Apple shows that the company may finally be vulnerable to the heightened scrutiny that other American tech companies have faced in recent years.”

As reported by Xinhua, the state-run news service, President Xi is quoted as saying “China must improve management of cyberspace and work to ensure high-quality content with positive voices creating a healthy, positive culture that is a force for good.”

The news is the news.  Content is both good and bad…

“Since the Snowden leaks, China’s state media identified eight American companies that it has labeled guardian warriors and that it has said were too deeply established in the country’s core industries such as energy, communications, education and military.”

“Sales in China for those companies, including Cisco, IBM, Microsoft and Qualcomm, have slid as government oversight has increased. Some have grappled with raids, investigations and fines. Some have also been pressured to sell of holdings, hand over technology and work with local partners to expand their China business.”

“Though Apple is one of the eight, it has had a much easier time.”

“Apple’s recent battle with the F.B.I over unlocking an iPhone for a terrorism investigation is unlikely to help it in China. Chinese lawyers have pointed out that the country’s antiterrorism law requires companies to help with decryption when the police or state security agents demand it for investigating or preventing terrorist acts.”

China debt load reaches record high as risk to economy mounts. Gabriel Wildau and Don Weinland. Financial Times. 23 Apr. 2016.

In case you were wondering why Keohane felt the need to clarify why China has the tools to handle its debts, consider that “Beijing has turned to massive lending to boost economic growth, bringing total net debt to Rmb163tn ($25tn) at the end of March (237% of GDP according to the FT).”

“While the absolute size of China’s debt load is a concern, more worrying is the speed at which it has accumulated – Chinese debt was only 148% of GDP at the end of 2007.”

“New borrowing increased by Rmb6.2tn in the first three months of 2016, the biggest three-month surge on record and more than 50% ahead of last year’s pace, according to central bank data and FT calculations.”

“Economists say it is difficult for any economy to deploy productively such a large amount of capital within a short period, given the limited number of profitable projects available at any given time.”

For comparison, according to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), Chinese debt at 249% of GDP, is “broadly comparable with the eurozone’s figure of 270% and the US level of 248%.”

“Economists widely agree that the health of the country’s economy is at risk. Where opinion is divided is on how this will play out.”

“At one end of the spectrum is acute financial crisis – a ‘Lehman moment’ reminiscent of the US in 2008, when banks failed and paralyzed credit markets. Other economists predict a chronic, Japan-style malaise in which growth slows for years or even decades.”

For those that believe in the likelihood of an acute financial crisis, a key concern is the amount of credit expansion that has occurred through high-yield wealth management products.  For the Japan-style scenario people point to the sheer amount of reserves the country has and the high savings rates of Chinese citizens.

Though, “it is wrong to assume that ‘too much debt’ is bad only if it causes a crisis, and this is a typical assumption made by almost every economist,” according to Michael Pettis, a professor at Peking University’s Guanghua School of Management.  Pettis points out “the most obvious example is Japan after 1990. It had too much debt, all of which was domestic, and as a consequence its growth collapsed.”

Department Stores Need to Cull Hundreds of Sites, Study Says. Suzanne Kapner. Wall Street Journal. 24 Apr. 2016.

Highlighting the existential crisis that the retail industry is facing is a report just put out by Green Street Advisors.  Essentially, “department store need to close hundreds of locations (roughly 800 or about 1/5 of all anchor space in U.S. malls) if they want to regain the productivity (sales per sq. ft.) they had a decade ago.”

“Sears Holdings Corp. alone would need to close 300, or 43%, of its Sears stores to regain the sales per square foot it had in 2006, adjusted for inflation, according to Green Street.”

“Sales at the nation’s department stores averaged $165 a square foot last year, a 24% drop since 2006, according to company disclosures and Green Street estimates.”

But department stores are loathe to close physical locations considering many stores still make money, the physical locations facilitate their online sales within the same market, and when they do close stores it doesn’t mean that the same shoppers then migrate to their other retail channels.

“It may be unrealistic to expect that department stores could ever return to historical levels of sales or profits given the changing dynamics of retailing. Many retailers say they make less money selling goods online than they do in their physical stores. And with the Internet making it easier for consumers to comparison shop, discounts have become the norm.”

“The store glut has important implications for the country’s weaker malls, which rely on their anchors to drive foot traffic. ‘If department stores were to move forward and aggressively streamline their physical presence it could result in several hundred malls no longer being relevant retail destinations.’ – DJ Busch, senior Green Street analyst.”

Other Interesting Articles

The Economist

Bloomberg – Blackstone Weighs Opening Up Real Estate to Individual Investors 4/21

Bloomberg – Japan Post to Fight Negative Rates With Shift to Risk Assets 4/21

FT – China’s debt: not a cheap American copy 4/21

FT – Europe should forget Google and investigate its own shortcomings (Michael Moritz) 4/22

FT – Caterpillar says business in Brazil has ‘basically tanked’ 4/22

FT – US Reits: a sector to buy in May and then enjoy the summer 4/24

FT – Fund star Sudhir Nanda warns of threat to human role in finance 4/25

FT – Ant Financial raises $4.5bn in record fintech private placement 4/25

FT – China to unroll nationwide soil pollution survey 4/25

FT – Japan’s negative rate experiment is an alarm bell for the US 4/25

FT – Nigeria’s import curbs drain life from bustling Lagos ports 4/26

FT – Daniel Loeb warns of hedge fund ‘killing field’ 4/27

InvestmentNews – Schorsch’s AR Global looking to consolidate $10.5 billion of REITs 4/26

Mauldin Economics – Xi Jinping Takes Command of the People’s Liberation Army 4/25

NYT – Renewable Energy Stumbles Toward the Future 4/22

NYT – Fantasy Math Is Helping Companies Spin Losses Into Profits 4/22

NYT – Jimmy Buffett’s ‘Margaritaville’ Is a State of Mind, and an Empire 4/23

NYT – Don’t Blame Silicon Valley for Theranos 4/27

ValueWalk – Carl Icahn Dumps Entire Apple Inc. (AAPL) Stock, Blames China 4/28

WSJ – Everyone Wants a Raise – Except Investors 4/22

WSJ – Alphabet’s Next Big Thing: Building a ‘Smart’ City 4/26

WSJ – No One Believes It, but Inflation Is a Pretty Good Bet 4/27

WSJ – Chinese Property Giant Evergrande Invests in Financial Folly 4/28

WSJ – The U.S. Homeownership Rate Falls Again, Nearing a 48-Year Low 4/28

Zero Hedge – Why Goldman Expects The Japanese Yen To Collapse Within 12 Months 4/24

 

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